Selected article for: "clinical testing and mRNA vaccine"

Author: Liu, Margaret A.
Title: A Comparison of Plasmid DNA and mRNA as Vaccine Technologies
  • Document date: 2019_4_24
  • ID: 0fx1b7ph_51
    Snippet: Prophylactic vaccine human trials for infectious diseases utilizing mRNA encoding the antigen(s) are shown in Table 3 . These are all Phase I trials. Any known formulations are listed, as are any described results and references, along with the clinical trials identifier numbers. The rabies vaccine effort utilizing a licensed vaccine with RNA as the adjuvant (discussed above, and listed in Table 4 ) was replaced by a vaccine using mRNA encoding t.....
    Document: Prophylactic vaccine human trials for infectious diseases utilizing mRNA encoding the antigen(s) are shown in Table 3 . These are all Phase I trials. Any known formulations are listed, as are any described results and references, along with the clinical trials identifier numbers. The rabies vaccine effort utilizing a licensed vaccine with RNA as the adjuvant (discussed above, and listed in Table 4 ) was replaced by a vaccine using mRNA encoding the rabies virus glycoprotein. Following either i.d. or i.m. injection of this rabies mRNA vaccine, boostable antibodies were obtained. However, 78% of each group had "solicited systemic adverse events" including ten patients (~10% of all injected patients) with grade three (i.e., serious but not life-threatening) adverse events, although the conclusion was that the vaccine was "generally safe with a reasonable tolerability profile" [55] . A second construct for rabies is now in clinical testing.

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